Four generations of RICHARDSONs 1917

Four generations of RICHARDSONs 1917
William Richardson, Alice Josephine Richardson Dakin, Robert Worthington Richardson, Harry Bogart Richardson
Showing posts with label RICHARDSON Frederick T. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RICHARDSON Frederick T. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2013

The Blind Agent's Divorce, The Rest of the Story

One of my readers of my last blog post about the blind insurance agent discovery, found the newspaper articles about the back story.  I was sure there had to be more details.  The first article was on page 15 of the 18 March 1916 of The Chicago Daily Tribune.  It not only described the altercation, but it told of Frederick losing his sight, refusing to marry his fiancée, being lured into the marriage, and a rather scary night with a stranger in the apartment.  

“Husband Blind;
Roomer in Home;
Divorce Sought

Romance of Broker and
Fiancee Who Stuck to 
Him Bared by Suit

SHE CHARGES A PLOT

  Frederick T. Richardson, whose sudden
blindness figured in a romatic marriage
in 1907, and who is a prosperous insur-
ance broker, brought suit for divorce yes-
terday.
   Richardson accuses his wife of being
too friendly with Henry F. Baker, 26
years old, a clerk, and a member of the
Richardson household.   Richardson is 47
years old and his wife 35.
   Richardson, who is junior member of
the insurance firm of William Richardson
& Son, was engaged to be maried in 1907.
His eyes were failing, but it was believed
that he would recover their use.  One 
evening as he sat with his father, mother,
and sister he spoke suddenly:
  “Who turned off the lights?”

     Stricken with Blindness.
   He was assured that the lights were still
burning.  For a time it was feared he had
lost his reason.  Then it dawned upon his
family that he had lost his sight.  At first
he was dejected, then determined to make
the most of it.  The girl to whom he was 
engaged came to him.
   “We cannot marry,” he told her.  But
she would not listen.
   “Your affliction shall not keep me from
your side.” she told him.  “We shall be
married and I will always be with you.”
   But Richarson persisted in refusing to 
handicap, as he thought, the future of
his financée.  On Sept. 4, 1907, Richardson
was encouraged to attend a party in St.
Joseph, Mich.  As the story goes, he was
taken on an automobile ride and the end
of the journey was in a justice’s office.
His brave fiancée was determined to show
that she was “with him through thick
and thin.”  They were married.

        Taps His Way Out of Flat.
   A week ago Friday neighbors said there
was a commotion of some sort in the 
Richardson flat.  After it had quieted
down Richardson was heard tapping his 
way downstairs with his cane.  For the
last few months, since he has been en-
tirely without sight, he has been led
about by a boy.
   Last night Mrs. Richardson told of
her domestic affairs.
   “On the night in question,” said Mrs.
Richardon, “Mr. Richardson was in his
room and I was in mine.  Mr. Baker, who
is a boarder at our house, was in his
room.

       Plot, She Charges.
   “I hear a noise and tried to awaken
Mr. Baker, but the boy slept soundly.
Before I could arouse Mr. Richardson
there was a man in the apartment and
another man and a policeman were at
the door.  Mr. Richardson tired to push
me into a room with Mr. Baker, but when
I saw they were private detective I re-
fused to be made a scapegoat.
   “The men then took the poor boy, Mr.
Baker, who was white with fright into a
rear room and forced him to sigh a con-
fession of guilt.”
   The elder Richardson is residing in San
Diego, Cal.  The  younger man could not
be found last night.”

The next article, gives both versions of the events of that Friday night 10 March 1916 and the threats in the months leading up to it.  It sounds like a divorce is a good idea for both of these people described in The Chicago Daily Tribune, on Tuesday 16 May 1916:

“BLIND HUSBAND
SET TRAP TO TEST
WIFE’S FIDELITY
       _________
Says New Dollar Bills He Put
In Her Bed Were Not Wrin-
kled Next Morning.
        _________
SHE DENIES ALL CHARGES.
        ________
   A blind husband and his wife -- the wife
alleging her nerves had been shattered
by treatment she received at his hands--
yesterday testified against each other in
Judge McKinley’s court.  Frederick T.
Richardson, junior member of the insur-
ance firm of William RIchardson & Son,
is the husband, and he is seek divorce
from his wife, Mrs. Frances E. Richard-
son, on charges of infidelity.
   Blindness, the affliction which cast a
halo of romance about their marriage
seven years ago, was capitalized in the
testimony by both the man and the
woman.  Mr. Richardson swore that his
wife took advantage of his condition to
flirt with Henry F. Baker, a one time
friend and roomer in the Richardson
home, at 4021 Lake Park avenue.  Mrs.
Richardson emphasized the assertion
that she married Mr. Richardson al-
though she knew he was doomed to blind-
ness and that she cared for him faith-
fully during the seven years of their mar-
ried life.

     Says He Threatened Murder.
   In addition to denying her husband’s
accusations Mrs. Richardson brought
countercharges against him.  His con-
duct, she said, was “inhuman.”  She
accused him of compelling her to submit
to indignities by threatening to end his
life unless she did as he demanded.  On
several occasions, she said, he had
threatened to kill both her and himself.
   There was also the name of “another
woman.”  Mrs. Richardson said on one
occasion three years ago she overheard
he husband talking over the telephone
with another woman.  She said she cried,
threatened to end his life, and finally
gave her the woman’s name.  Mrs. Rich-
ardson said the woman was “Mrs. La
Pointe, who lives at 2541 Indiana avenue.”

      Broke Into Apartment.
   Mr. Richardson rested his case on cer-
tain occurrences on the night of March
10.  Since that night, he said, he and
his wife have been living apart.  Pri-
vate detectives testified that they went
to the Richardson apartment that night
and found Mrs. Richardson in Mr. Bak-
er’s room, which adjoined her own.  Mr.
Richardson told the jurors that he called
the detectives after his own original 
methods had led him to believe his wife
faithless.
   Handicapped by his blindness, according-
ing to Mr. Richardson, he put crisp dol-
lar bills between the sheets of his wife’s
bed in the evenings.  In the mornings,
he said, he would enter his wife’s room
after she was out of the way.  If he
found the bills still there unwrinkled,
then he believed that his wife had not
occcupied the bed.

     Story by Wife.
   Mrs. Richardson gave another version 
of what happened in the apartment that
night.  She said she had gone to be “at
the usual time, 10 or half-past.”
  “Between half-past 1 and 2,” the wife
said, “I heard voices outside the window.
Then I saw a hand raising the window.
I jumped out of bed and ran through to
Mr. Baker’s room screaming for help.  I 
locked the door behind me.  He didn’t pay
any attention and then I ran to my hus-
band’s room.  I told Mr. Richardson there
were burglars in the house.  He didn’t
seem to pay any attention.  He grabbed
me, and I had to break a-way.
   “Neither Mr. Richardson nor Mr.
Baker seemed to care about the burglars.
I couldn’t understand.  Neither one of 
them said anything.   Then Mr. Richard-
son opened the door and these men” --
she indicated the detectives in the court-
room--”came in.  I went to my room to
get on some clothes.”
  Mrs. Richardson then denied the
charges of infidelity made against her.”

Traps to show infidelity by one of the "happily married couple" and information on "the other woman" revealed by the other.  Stories of threatened violence and even putting new dollar bills under the other's bedsheets.  The next day is the verdict, 17 May 1916, The Chicago Daily Tribune, page, almost word-for-word reprinted in the Portland Oregon paper quoted in the last post.

“BLIND MAN GETS DIVORCE
Chicago Broker Gets Decree on Mis-
conduct Charge.

CHICAGO, May 22 -- Twelve men
with two eyes apiece marched from
an anteroom into Judge McKenley’s
courtroom, gazed impassively at a
pretty woman, and stood while the
clerk read their verdict finding the
pretty woman guilty of misconduct
and granting a divorce to her sightless
husband.
   The wife, severely costumed, turned
to look at the face of Frederick T.
Richardson, blind insurance under-
writer, who began tap-tapping to walk
from the room.  A little later, Mrs.
Richardson, accompanied by her attor-
ney, Robert E. Crowe, also departed.
     She had recited her defense.  Henry
F. Baker, said she had been a roomer
and a family friend in the Richardson
home at 4021 Lake Park Avenue.  Her
Husband had tried to thrust her into 
Mr. Baker’s room when private de-
tectives, prearranged by plan, had ap-
peared at the door.
  “I married Fred Richardson, al-
though I knew he was going blind.”
she said.  “Always I was faithful to
him.  They frightened that that poor boy,
Baker, into making a confession.”

Thinking about a timeline of events:
• 1907 F. T. Richardson marries Frances E. [last name to be determined], his 3rd wife.
• 1916 scandalous divorce makes front page with all the details, including "other woman" (Mrs. LaPointe who lives at 2541 Indiana Ave.)
• 1923 F.T. Richardson dies in Winamac, Indiana, one of his obituaries says he and his wife moved there about 6 years ago.  1923 - 6 = 1917.  The final wife in the court papers (I'm still waiting for from Chicago) is named Sadie Richardson, as is in the land records from Pulaski County, Indiana.    
I checked the 1910 census for Chicago for a "Sadie LaPointe" -- guess who shows up at 2541 Indiana Avenue, married to a Frank R LaPointe?  Sadie LaPointe.
Is this the Sadie who our Frederick marries and moves with to Winamac, Indiana about a year after his divorce?

Maybe the wife was telling the truth and the jury of 12 men didn't believe her!

© Erica Dakin Voolich 2013

Friday, September 13, 2013

The Blind Insurance Agent is Discovered

I've been working on figuring out what happened to various children of William Richardson and Mary A C Bogart, my GG-grandparents.  They died in 1921 and 1910.  There are pieces of the puzzle still missing, but some DuPage County IL probate records led to Pulaski County Indiana for land records.  But that is another story, once I get the last piece of the puzzle from the Cook County Court archives.

Years ago I had finally found that William and Mary were buried in Hinsdale IL, there I learned she died in Downers Grove IL and he in Winamac IN.  Why Indiana?  He died with his son Fredrick, but why was a 50-something Chicago insurance agent in Winamac?  It's not exactly commuting distance from Chicago.

Last month, on my way to the Federation of Genealogical Societies conference, I stopped in Winamac to look for probate records for William and Fred Richardson.  There is a wonderful woman in the County Clerk's office who knows how to help genealogists, and welcomes them.  She looked, no probate, but asked if I had checked the library (they had one of the newspapers "indexed" for vital records and microfilm of the issues).  She called the library to say we were coming and where to direct us.  The index was helpful, we learned when Frederick died, just two years later [new information to me] and that the local paper did have obituaries, which I looked up and copied.


Frederick T. Richardson
     The death of Frederick T.Richard-
son occurred Friday evening, Dec-
ember 14 at ten o’clock at his home
just east of town.  Mr. Richardson
had been sick with menengitis but
was thought to be better and had
been up around the house that even-
ing. He retired about nine o’clock
and Mrs. Richardson was reading to 
him when death came.  The immed-
iate cause of his death was a stroke
of apoplexy.
     The deceased was 55 years of age
and leaves a wife and a foster daugh-
ter. Mrs. Janet Phillips.  Mr. and 
Mrs. Richardson came here from Chi-
cago several years ago.
     The funeral was held Monday af-
ternoon at one o’clock at the Presby-
terian church, conducted by Rev. C.
S. Valder with interment in the Win-
amac cemetery.”
The Winamac Republician, 20 December 1923, vol. 57, page 6.


At that time I didn't know about a lawsuit involving Frederick and his wife.  I learned about that a week later.  So, I contacted that wonderful woman in the Pulaski County office to ask her to look for some land records relating to it.  She did and found the records, I sent my fees and an envelop and then today arrived not only those land records [still to be sorted out] along with a surprise.
Today's was another obituary for our GG'uncle Fred:


“F.T. RICHARDSON
  The death of Frederick T. Richard-
son occurred Friday evening at the 
home east of Winamac.  Hed had been
seriously ill for several days from an
attack of menigitis, presumed to
have been a result of severe treatment
that he had been taking in Chicago
in an effort to regain his sight, which
failed totally about fifteen years ago.
He was feeling much better Friday
and had been up and around the
house, but a cerebral hemorrhage
after he had retired for the night
brought death quickly.
   Mr. Richardson was fifty-five years
of age on Nov. 19.  He and Mrs. 
Richardson moved here from Chicago
about six years ago.  His father, Wil-
liam Richardson, died here two years
ago the day of the son’s funeral. which
was held Monday afternoon.  Services 
were conducted at the home by Rev.
C. S. Valder, and interment was given
in the Winamc cemetery."
Pulaski County Democrat, Thursday 20 December 1923


Wow!  He was blind and had been for 15 years!  That might explain why he wasn't still working in his father's insurance agency in the past few years.  It notes that he died two  years after his father, how many years they were in town, gives details about his going to Chicago for treatment for his blindness. Unfortunately, neither obituary gives his wife's name!

This led back to an article in my Richardson-wantabee file:


28 May 1916, Oregonian (Portland OR), Vol XXXV, issue 22, section 5, page 11:
“BLIND MAN GETS DIVORCE
Chicago Broker Gets Decree on Mis-
conduct Charge.

CHICAGO, May 22 -- Twelve men
with two eyes apiece marched from
an anteroom into Judge McKenley’s
courtroom, gazed impassively at a
pretty woman, and stood while the
clerk read their verdict finding the
pretty woman guilty of misconduct
and granting a divorce to her sightless
husband.
   The wife, severely costumed, turned
to look at the face of Frederick T.
Richardson, blind insurance under-
writer, who began tap-tapping to walk
from the room.  A little later, Mrs.
Richardson, accompanied by her attor-
ney, Robert E. Crowe, also departed.
     She had recited her defense.  Henry
F. Baker, said she had been a roomer
and a family friend in the Richardson
home at 4021 Lake Park Avenue.  Her
Husband had tried to thrust her into 
Mr. Baker’s room when private de-
tectives, prearranged by plan, had ap-
peared at the door.
  “I married Fred Richardson, al-
though I knew he was going blind.”
she said.  “Always I was faithful to
him.  They frightened that that poor boy,
Baker, into making a confession.”


This piece of news tells me not only was Fred Richardson blind but it tells me where he was living [that Richardson family moved frequently in the past couple of decades], was involved in some sort of scandal with his now former wife [un-named, unfortunately], that he took in roomers.  I'm sure there must have been an article about this that was in a Chicago paper [this was in a paper from Portland OR, a common thing to do with sensational stories].  And what does "severely dressed" mean?

Sounds like it is time to see if there are court records and maybe more newspaper coverage to be found!


©Erica Dakin Voolich, 2013
The link to this page is http://genea-adventures.blogspot.com/2013/09/ive-been-working-on-figuring-out-what.html